I'm going to spend some time this evening measuring and cutting PVC - my sump is in place!
Got a question about my drain & return before I start gluing things up, though -
The standpipes (drain and return) on this 220 were never glued into their respective bulkheads. With the drain, I get that - there's not a lot of pressure there, and what there is will tend to force the pipe _into_ its bulkead. Not gluing it means that you can lift it out periodically, and flush the weir of detritus - or errant clownfish. For the return, though, that worries me a bit. (I have no idea what kind of flow the previous owner - it was a fish-only sales tank - had going through these 3/4" pipes.) I've got a Fluval Sea SP6, rated at something like 3,000 GPH for my return, and I'm a bit worried that I'll blow the pipes out of the bulkheads - I don't really want "Old Faithful" in my living room!
Safe enough to continue with the previous friction-fit, or should I be using cement to seal the deal?
~Bruce
Got a question about my drain & return before I start gluing things up, though -
The standpipes (drain and return) on this 220 were never glued into their respective bulkheads. With the drain, I get that - there's not a lot of pressure there, and what there is will tend to force the pipe _into_ its bulkead. Not gluing it means that you can lift it out periodically, and flush the weir of detritus - or errant clownfish. For the return, though, that worries me a bit. (I have no idea what kind of flow the previous owner - it was a fish-only sales tank - had going through these 3/4" pipes.) I've got a Fluval Sea SP6, rated at something like 3,000 GPH for my return, and I'm a bit worried that I'll blow the pipes out of the bulkheads - I don't really want "Old Faithful" in my living room!
Safe enough to continue with the previous friction-fit, or should I be using cement to seal the deal?
~Bruce
